I think that work has to continue to progress. It may look like we spent a lot of time on international issues, which may perhaps seem glamorous and so on, but it wasn't that kind of choice. Because of the way the Internet functions, because of Canada's economic position, with so much on the Internet.... First of all, we're big users of the Internet and we're big users of the social network. A lot of our content comes from the United States or from France—even the United States for French-speaking Canadians. We have no choice but to engage internationally.
If you want to enforce our law against somebody who's sitting on the other side of the world, you need to have the ties with the enforcement agency on the other side, and you must have the credibility and have built up a relationship ahead of time. That's why another bill that is currently before the House of Commons.... Well, actually it is in Bill C-29, which went to the Senate, that I have extended power to share information and to enter into working relationships with other agencies and other organizations that do similar work in order to further Canadian law.
That's basically what we're trying to do, ideally: to better global protection for Canadians as their personal information circles around the globe.